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Peer reviewedBennett, William J. – Educational Record, 1981
The most important contribution the humanities makes to public policy is the sound education of those who will make future public policy. The humanists' task is to provide continuity, to educate each generation about its intellectual, spiritual, moral, and political birthright from which public policy must flow. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Role, Higher Education, Humanistic Education, Humanities
Vonalt, Larry; And Others – Engineering Education, 1980
Describes a course offered for the freshman civil engineering major at the University of Missouri-Rolla. The rationale of developing the course which focuses on the symbolic, social, and technological aspects of the Mississippi River is included. (HM)
Descriptors: College English, College Students, Course Descriptions, Curriculum Development
Ervin, Gerard L. – ADE Bulletin, 1980
Describes a weekend job workshop for humanities graduate students and recent PhD recipients in which they come into contact with individuals of similar backgrounds who have found nonacademic employment. Recent workshops are described, and recommendations for conducting workshops are included, such as enlisting consultants and using the placement…
Descriptors: Career Exploration, Career Planning, College Programs, Graduate Students
Weiss, Robert H. – Improving College and University Teaching, 1979
West Chester State College's pilot project to improve writing builds on writing skills established in the freshman English courses and extends these skills through writing practice and instruction in the humanities and other disciplines. Obstacles encountered in developing the program, program design, instructional techniques, and spinoff projects…
Descriptors: College Curriculum, College Instruction, English Instruction, Higher Education
Peer reviewedFizer, John – Journal of Thought, 1981
The author calls for a radical revision and restructuring of doctoral programs in the humanities which have, he claims, surpassed in productivity the needs of our society and, in terms of their intellectual objectives, become mere exercises in sterile academic liturgy. (Author/SJL)
Descriptors: Administrative Organization, Departments, Doctoral Programs, Education Work Relationship
Peer reviewedNiemi, Richard G.; Phillips, James E. – Journal of Medical Education, 1980
An analysis of the undergraduate transcripts of 465 students from the University of Rochester who applied to medical school indicates a surprising breadth in undergraduate training, which is inconsistent with critics' claims of narrowness in premedical education. Medical educators are called upon to further specify the desired role of nonscience…
Descriptors: Academic Records, College Applicants, College Curriculum, College Students
Peer reviewedDowd, Ruth – Liberal Education, 1979
The School of New Resources is described as a liberal arts program that helps adults enrich their lives by building on their life experiences within a formal learning environment. Core courses culminate in a seminar to integrate or synthesize the educational process and reinforce the humanistic thrust of the program. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Students, Colleges, Core Curriculum
Peer reviewedKolloff, Penny Britton – Journal of Secondary Gifted Education, 1996
This article discusses the lack of materials on the contributions of women in the humanities. Recommendations are offered on ways to incorporate female contributions into the content of the curriculum and modify instructional approaches to accommodate some of the learning differences between female and male students. (CR)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Cognitive Style, Curriculum Design, Educational Strategies
Peer reviewedWinter, Christine – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2000
Explores whether teacher training standards have made it more difficult for teacher educators to enable student teachers to become reflective teachers. Argues that the standards ignore important issues related to equality in the classroom and the relationship between education and the state. Includes references. (CMK)
Descriptors: Educational History, Equal Education, Foreign Countries, Government Role
Peer reviewedPetrou, Anastasis D. – International Journal of Educational Technology, 2002
Describes an evaluation of ArtsOnline, a Web site designed to support humanities-based interdisciplinary inquiry in the Los Angeles Unified School District. Discuses barriers and challenges that lessen the benefits of Web-based instructional technology, including poor Web site design, insufficient editing, low access to technology, lack of…
Descriptors: Art Education, Educational Finance, Educational Technology, Evaluation Methods
Peer reviewedEss, Charles – Computers and the Humanities, 2000
Describes the successes, limitations, and costs of incorporating Web-accessible conferencing software and discourse ethics in a religious studies class. Suggests that electronic instruction may work for some students but not for all. States that electronic teaching should be viewed as one teaching method among many. Includes references. (CMK)
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Computer Uses in Education, Educational Strategies, Electronic Mail
Peer reviewedSuhor, Charles – English Journal, 1991
Argues the importance of the relationships among silence and literature, the arts, and other experiences that point toward transcendence. Suggests that English teachers can expand the repertoire of classroom activities and teaching techniques that make use of silence. (KEH)
Descriptors: Discovery Learning, English Curriculum, Humanities Instruction, Interdisciplinary Approach
Peer reviewedClark, Walter H., Jr. – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 1990
Discusses teaching English literature in relation to E. D. Hirsch's book, "Cultural Literacy". Isolates Hirsch's literary references and discusses how they can be used to teach undergraduates. Maintains that schools of education and English departments can contribute to cultural literacy because they educate prospective teachers. (KM)
Descriptors: Criticism, Cultural Awareness, Cultural Education, Curriculum Development
Peer reviewedKrieger, Martin H. – Liberal Education, 1990
A promising model for professional education is the workshop, studio, or clinic, wherein a team takes on the complexity of actual situations and must figure out what to do. In these situations, individual abstracted problem solving is secondary. In general education, instructors and students are less protected by disciplinary fences. (MLW)
Descriptors: Clinical Experience, Core Curriculum, General Education, Higher Education
Peer reviewedGiles, Joe; Curtis, Cynthia R. – Design for Arts in Education, 1989
Describes Tennessee's response to the educational reform movement. Discusses the Comprehensive Education Reform Act of 1984 (CERA) which instituted Tennessee's Career Ladder Program. Provides an evaluation, and identifies strengths and weaknesses of the the Tennessee Arts Academy which grew out of CERA. Concludes that the Tennessee Arts Academy is…
Descriptors: Art Education, Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education


